CHAPTER VII.
CONCLUSION.
Reader,—I have but a word or two more to say.
Insignificant as this marriage may seem to you, I can assure you that nothing else has ever occurred in the history of American prejudice against color, which so startled the nation from North to South and East to West. On the announcement of the probability of the case merely, men and women were panic-stricken, deserted their principles and fled in every direction.
Indignation meetings were held in and about Fulton immediately after the mob. The following Resolution was passed unanimously in one of them:—
"Resolved,—That Amalgamation is no part of the Free Democracy of Granby." (Town near F.)
The Editor of the Fulton newspaper, however, spoke of us with respect. Let him be honored. He condemned the mob, opposed amalgamation, but described the parties thus,—"Miss King, a young lady of talent, education, and unblemished character," and myself, "a gentleman, a scholar, and a Christian, and a citizen against whose character nothing whatever had been urged."
I have said that some of the Papers regretted that I had not been killed outright. I give an extract from the "Phoenix Democrat," published in the State of New York:—
"This Professor Allen may get down on his marrow bones, and thank God that we are not related to Mary King by the ties of consanguinity."